Study: Leading Retail Sites Slow to Adopt AJAX

thumbnail Study: Leading Retail Sites Slow to Adopt AJAX

According to a recent survey of more than 200 online retailers, less than 20 percent of them are using Asynchronous JavaScript and XML techniques to build out their sites, and only about 6 percent use advanced AJAX techniques. The survey, conducted by Brulant, an online systems solutions building and marketing company, during October and November […]

Written By: Darryl K. Taft
Jan 5, 2007
Channel Insider content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More

According to a recent survey of more than 200 online retailers, less than 20 percent of them are using Asynchronous JavaScript and XML techniques to build out their sites, and only about 6 percent use advanced AJAX techniques.

The survey, conducted by Brulant, an online systems solutions building and marketing company, during October and November of 2006, showed that many top retailers—including Ace Hardware, AutoZone, Bed Bath & Beyond, Books a Million, Circuit City Stores and Eddie Bauer—are not using AJAX on their Web sites. Retailers that are using AJAX include Abercrombie & Fitch, Amazon.com, Blockbuster, Crate and Barrel, and Gap.

The Brulant study examined the policies of 115 leading online retailers over their use of both “simple” and “advanced” AJAX development. For the purposes of the study, simple AJAX was defined as when AJAX technology is used to retrieve additional product details prompted by hovering or clicking a quick-view link. Advanced AJAX was defined as when AJAX technology is used in the overall shopping experience to provide additional product detail information such as scrolling marketing spots and to add to cart functionality.

Google open-sources an AJAX tool kit. Click here to read more.

19.3 percent of study respondents said they have been using simple AJAX, and 6.1 percent said they were using advanced AJAX development.

Brulant officials said the methodology used to validate the use of AJAX included visiting the sites and testing various methods of category and product navigation, adding items to carts, and the start of the checkout process. Also, the command “view source” was used to look for known AJAX tool kits or any custom-built rich Internet applications.

“AJAX is arguably the best rich Internet application available to developers right now, but its complexity and the disruption to traditional development processes [seem] to be hindering the widespread adoption predicted by many experts,” said Mark Fodor, a partner with Brulant, in Beachwood, Ohio.

Guru Jakob Nielsen offers advice on designing applications for usability. Click here to watch the video.

However, he said, “AJAX has the ability to vastly improve the customer’s online experience, and the benefits of implementing AJAX in terms of customer satisfaction and conversion rates are argument enough for its implementation.”

Fodor concluded, “Developers are suspicious of anything that they perceive as ‘hype.’ Add to this massive confusion about which AJAX solutions to use at what level, and how many, and you’ve got a situation where adoption is happening at a much slower pace. The [result] is that companies are missing out on the benefits at a pretty high opportunity cost.”

Check out eWEEK.com’s for the latest news, reviews and analysis in programming environments and developer tools.

Recommended for you...

Trend Micro and Google Cloud Double Down on AI Security

The expanded alliance emphasizes AI-driven defenses, sovereign cloud capabilities, and new anti-scam protections for businesses worldwide.

Allison Francis
Jul 30, 2025
Arctera Updates Platform to Reduce AI Compliance Risks

Arctera updates Insight to help organizations capture, chronicle & contain AI data, easing compliance and unlocking insights from LLM interactions.

TA Wordpress
Jul 30, 2025
Channel Vet Frank Rauch Joining Morphisec in Advisory Role

Channel vet Frank Rauch joins Morphisec’s advisory board to boost MSSP strategy and partner growth with a prevention-first cybersecurity focus.

Jordan Smith
Jul 29, 2025
Azul Debuts Managed Services Program for Java-Focused Partners

Azul empowers MSPs with sublicensable Java insights, enabling code cleanup, vulnerability detection, and license compliance via Intelligence Cloud.

Jordan Smith
Jul 29, 2025
Channel Insider Logo

Channel Insider combines news and technology recommendations to keep channel partners, value-added resellers, IT solution providers, MSPs, and SaaS providers informed on the changing IT landscape. These resources provide product comparisons, in-depth analysis of vendors, and interviews with subject matter experts to provide vendors with critical information for their operations.

Property of TechnologyAdvice. © 2025 TechnologyAdvice. All Rights Reserved

Advertiser Disclosure: Some of the products that appear on this site are from companies from which TechnologyAdvice receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site including, for example, the order in which they appear. TechnologyAdvice does not include all companies or all types of products available in the marketplace.